blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Business News

 

British Airways to axe 1,200 more jobs
Posted: 06 November 2009 2335 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 


LONDON: British Airways revealed a quadrupling of net losses in its first half on Friday, and axed an extra 1,200 jobs in an "essential" cost-reduction programme.

BA posted a loss after tax of 217 million pounds (US$361 million) during the six months to September 30, compared with a loss of 49 million pounds during the equivalent period in 2008.

"Aviation remains in recession," BA chief executive Willie Walsh said in comments accompanying news of the company's deep loss.

"With (BA) revenue likely to be one billion pounds lower this year, we can't stand still and further cost reduction is essential," he warned.

British Airways said it would cut an extra 1,200 jobs, taking the total planned reduction to 4,900 by 2010.

Most of the new losses would be outside Britain and follows a high response from staff agreeing to work part-time or take voluntary redundancy to help secure the airline's future.

Reacting to news of fresh cost-cutting measures, BA's share price rallied 6.28 per cent to 198 pence on London's benchmark FTSE 100 index, which was up 0.23 per cent to 5,137.32 points in midday trade.

BA also announced on Friday that group sales dropped nearly 14 per cent to 4.1 billion pounds in the first half.

Some commercial airlines across the world are suffering badly from the massive global economic slump that has slashed demand for air travel and sparked a major cash squeeze for the sector.

However, on Monday, Irish low-cost airline Ryanair said its net profit had shot up 80 per cent to 387 million euros (US$570.8 million) in April-September compared with the figure for the same period 12 months earlier.

On Thursday, Italian airline Alitalia reported its first operating profit since its takeover by an alliance of Italian business interests last January.

Meanwhile, BA, in a bid to improve its fortunes and claw back ground lost to British rival Virgin, launched an all-business class service from London to New York late in September.

Previous attempts at all-business class services from airlines such as Maxjet and Silverjet failed in the run-up to the worst downturn since the 1930s.

Earlier this year, British Airways decided to scrap all free meals apart from breakfast on its short-haul flights in an attempt to reduce overheads.

BA suffered an annual loss of 375 million pounds in its 2008-09 financial year, which it blamed on high fuel costs.

- AFP/sc

 


Other business News
Eurozone sets conditions for Greek bailout
Banks agree US$25b deal for US homeowners
China releases Jan trade data
Flights back to normal Friday after strike: Air France
M'sia trade expected to grow at slower pace
US stocks gain on Greece, bank mortgage deal
Euro edges up as Greece inks reform deal
Oil prices rise on Greek deal
Eurozone stalls Greek cash aid pending new conditions
China says January exports expected to have dropped
Greece says agreement reached on austerity measures: ECB
ECB holds key interest rate steady at 1.0%
OPEC cuts 2012 oil demand forecast
China's January inflation hits 3-month high
Spain's economy to worsen in Q1
Indonesia cuts interest rate to record low
Malaysia sees record trade in 2011
Rio Tinto earnings down 59% on aluminium write-down
Asia stocks mixed on Greek fears, China inflation
China's Alibaba raising US$3b for Yahoo! stake

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions